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By Chris Lang
ALEXANDRIA — Soon, Pete DeTemple will board a plane to Colorado for a trip to the U.S. Senior Open Championship, which he qualified for last month in New Jersey. He’ll take with him a measure of confidence after claiming his first individual Virginia State Golf Association championship.
DeTemple, a member at Old Hickory Golf Club, took a two-stroke lead at the turn in Thursday’s second round of the 33rd VSGA Senior Stroke Play Championship and held on for dear life. His two-putt par on No. 18 held up when Jim Woodson’s 10-foot birdie putt slid left of the hole, giving DeTemple a one-stroke victory.
DeTemple posted a 1-over 69 at Mount Vernon Country Club Thursday for a two-day aggregate 3-under 133, leaving him a shot clear of Woodson (Mill Quarter Plantation) and Buck Brittain (The Virginian GC).
“I’ve always been in contention in this tournament,” DeTemple said. “I know I’ve been swinging it good this year.”
DeTemple, who won the 2016 VSGA Senior Four-Ball title with Mike Krulich and lost to Krulich in a playoff a month later at the Senior Stroke Play, swung it well Thursday, too, but like the two players who finished a stroke back, he struggled to convert on the greens. That led to some tense moments down the stretch.
DeTemple’s two-shot lead at the turn evaporated immediately when he made bogey on the short par-4 10th and Woodson made birdie, leaving the two tied atop the leaderboard. Woodson bogeyed No. 12 and DeTemple hit a tree on his over-water approach on 14, leading to a bogey that left the competitors level again.
Woodson misjudged his shot on the par-3 15th hole, leaving him above the hole for his birdie putt. He ended up making bogey, and DeTemple had the lead for good.
But closing out the victory didn’t come easy. On the par-3 16th hole, DeTemple’s tee shot was a line drive that settled in thick rough short and to the right of the hole. He got up-and-down for par, and Woodson and Brittain both just barely missed their birdie attempts.
“I went for the low shot and just got too much in front of it and rifled it, skulled it, basically,” DeTemple said. “I just cleared the water and left myself in jail. It was sitting on bare dirt, and I had one chance. I said I could just get myself on the green and leave myself a 25 footer. But then I said, I’m going for the Phil Mickelson flop shot. I’d tried it once before. And I pulled it off, hit it to 38, 40 inches and made the putt.”
After all three made par on 17, DeTemple went to 18 clinging to his one-shot lead. His approach was on line but scooted well past the hole, leaving him a tricky 30-foot comebacker. Woodson put his approach 10 feet right of the flagstick, giving him an excellent look at birdie. Brittain’s approach was right on line but came up short of the green, leaving him stunned in the fairway.
“When it left the club, I thought I had staked it,” Brittain said. “When it came up short, it just blew me away. I’m not sure what happened. I felt like I hit it good, I hit it crisp. I thought it would spin, and I was trying to hit it past the hole. I guessed I misjudged the wind and it came up short.”
DeTemple’s putt came up a foot short of the hole, leaving him an easy tap-in for par. He then had to sweat out Woodson’s birdie attempt, which had it fallen, would have forced a playoff.
“When I hit the putt, I said, ‘It’s perfect,’” Woodson said. “Then it got about a foot away from the hole and it just snapped. It broke all the way across the hole. I just read it wrong, I guess. I hit the putt exactly the way I wanted. It’s not like I didn’t hit it hard enough to get it there.”
Leon Roday (Kinloch GC) shot a 1-under 67 for a two-day 135 to finish in fourth. George Kapetanakis (Trump National GC) followed his opening-round 66 with a 70 to finish alone in fifth at 136.
DeTemple will be making his second U.S. Senior Open appearance, having shot 76-75—151 to miss the cut in 2012 at Indianwood G&CC in Michigan. He’s thrilled for the opportunity to add more to his 2018 resume, which includes titles in the Senior Stroke Play, the Fox Puss senior division and the Society of Seniors Masters.
“They’re the best in the world, the best,” DeTemple said. “Just to be able to play with those guys … There’s 21 amateurs out of 156 players. To be able to play and say you’re in the top 21? I’m happy. Do I want to be able to make the cut? I would love to. The odds are probably slim. Those guys are professionals. I work for a living. They work on their game.”
Chris Lang is the Editor of Virginia Golfer Magazine and Manager, Digital Media for the VSGA.